HCHTech
Well-Known Member
- Reaction score
- 4,178
- Location
- Pittsburgh, PA - USA
I'm quoting an "fix my wireless" install at a larger residential site. So I'm looking at 3 Ubiquity Pro APs, connected with TPLink AV2000 powerline adapters, and a new wireless router (replacing an aging Apple Airport Extreme). One of the heavy users is a teenage son doing a lot of MMO gaming. His lair is in a finished basement that is unfortunately on a sub-panel for electric, so we'll be putting the AP in the original part of the basement that is wired on the main electrical panel. We'll be replacing his little USB wifi dongle with a PCI adapter, probably the Asus AC1900 - I've used those successfully in the past to squeeze the most performance possible out of a wireless connection.
Besides the gaming PC, there are 3 or 4 smartphones, a couple of iPads, 3 smart TVs, 2 iMacs and 2 laptops that will be accessing the network at various times. Oh, and there is a Sonos system with a base and 3 remote units. Everything but 2 computers is wireless.
Anyway, since we need a new wifi router - I'm wondering about the potential advantages of a "gaming" router like the Asus RT-AC88U, over a more normal AC router, like the Linksys AC2600 or TPLINK Archer C3200 offerings.
I've never used that Asus model before, and my first reaction is that most of the features are probably more about marketing than real-world performance. Plus, it's a whole lot more expensive. What do you think?
Besides the gaming PC, there are 3 or 4 smartphones, a couple of iPads, 3 smart TVs, 2 iMacs and 2 laptops that will be accessing the network at various times. Oh, and there is a Sonos system with a base and 3 remote units. Everything but 2 computers is wireless.
Anyway, since we need a new wifi router - I'm wondering about the potential advantages of a "gaming" router like the Asus RT-AC88U, over a more normal AC router, like the Linksys AC2600 or TPLINK Archer C3200 offerings.
I've never used that Asus model before, and my first reaction is that most of the features are probably more about marketing than real-world performance. Plus, it's a whole lot more expensive. What do you think?